A player in the field, he straddles the foul line behind a runner that is on 3rd base.
The most interesting thing about this post is that it is the only one I have ever seen on this site that has contained a grammatical construction such as the above. In fact, it contains two of them (sort of), the other being
if you have a runner running down this same line, he straddles the line.
This device of simply naming the subject and then referring to it with a pronoun is not incorrect, but it's rather archaic and usually found in older poetry. "The smith, a mighty man is he . . ."
Anyway, the fielder, he can't balk.
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greymule
More whiskey—and fresh horses for my men!
Roll Tide!
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